It will be months before your newborn will utter anything that sounds like real word, and probably a year or more before those sounds turn into words with real meaning behind them. So how are you to understand your newborn’s wants and needs now? Luckily, babies are equipped with ways to communicate right from birth. The trick is figuring out how to recognize and interpret them. Here are six tips that will have you on your way to reading your baby like a book.

Photo: Harald Groven via Flickr

In a Mood

Identifying your newborn’s mood is a good place to start. There are six states of consciousness for a baby. In deep sleep, her eyes will be closed and her body still. In light sleep, her eyes may open briefly and she may move or startle more easily. Drowsy is when baby is sleepy or dozing but isn’t fully asleep yet. Quiet alert is when she is awake, but her body is still and she seems focused. Active alert is wide awake with movement of the face and body. The last state is crying, in which she may squirm and be difficult to soothe. Knowing what state she is in will help you know the best way interact with her.

Photo: Family O’Abe via Flickr

Body Language

A newborn’s body can say a lot. Sucking on hands or fingers is a sure sign that he’s hungry, as is rooting (turning his head to the side and opening his mouth). Turning his head away when you attempt to play is a sign of overstimulation. Then it’s best to wait until he turns back to you to try to play or talk to him. Rubbing his eyes, yawning or a glazed over look indicates he’s tired. Don’t wait, put him to bed right away. A smile lets you know your baby is content or happy. Smile back and revel in it. Telling him how much you like his smiles encourages him to do it more.

Photo: Beth via Flickr

Cry Like a Baby

The number one tool a newborn has to communicate is crying. The Dunston Baby Language, or DBL, method is a way to listen to baby’s pre-cry noises and cries to decode them into something parents understand. You can train yourself to hear one of five phonetic sounds your little one will make prior to crying. Each sound has a different meaning, like “neh” that translates into “I’m hungry.” Then you can respond accordingly and avoid a meltdown. You might also notice your babies cries taking on different pitches or intensities. Identify what kind of cry it is and what works to soothe that particular cry.

Photo: Dean Wissing via Flickr

Little Babbler

By two to three months old, babies will be able to vocalize beyond crying to communicate. They will coo and babble, imitate voice inflection, and even laugh. This is the beginning of a conversation between you and your little bundle of joy. Reply to her noises, narrate your activities for her when she’s awake and alert, and pause to let her contribute to the conversation.

Start a Schedule(ish)

Foster a schedule for your newborn. Though the schedule will be less about watching the clock and more about noticing the rhythm of your baby’s day. Use a simple chart to keep track of his eating, sleeping, and diapering needs. At first it may not feel like there is any rhyme or reason to these things, but once you start to pay attention, you will notice patterns appearing. You can use these patterns to more easily recognize what your newborn is needing at that time of day. There’s even an app for that! Two to try are My Baby & Me and Baby Log.

Photo: ckmck via Flickr

Know the Signs

What better way for baby to communicate what she wants than by actually telling you? Not with her mouth but with her hands. Babies are able to use sign language long before they can talk. As early six months old, she has the cognitive and motor skills to begin signing. It’s best to introduce the concept well before her half-birthday as it usually takes a few months before she will do it on her own. Here are some great starter signs to try.

The fact is you’re the expert on your own newborn. By paying attention, listening, observing and loving your baby, you already have the most important tools you need to understand what they want. Babies will fuss, cry and laugh, but your love for them will speak loud enough for the two of you.

What successful ways have you tried to figure out what your baby wants? Let us know in the comments.

–Katie L. Carroll

Whether you’re a first time parent or on your second, third or even fourth baby, we could all use a few more tricks up our sleeves for calming crying babies and getting them to sleep. Here are a few amazing, quirky and tried and true baby care tips you should know.

Photo: Youtube 

1. Calm Your Crying Baby in Seconds
Newborns cry a lot, and sometimes even our best mother’s or father’s instincts can’t seem to calm them. Now pediatrician Dr. Robert Hamilton has released a video that shows him calming crying babies with a simple (and gentle) bum jiggling routine called “The Hold.” This 30-year veteran pediatrician swears by the technique for calming little ones in seconds. Watch the full video for details on how to try it yourself.

2. Implement a 5-Point Baby Soothing Plan
Follow renowned pediatrician Dr. Harvey Karp’s advice – the 5 S’s – and you’ll have a handful of new ideas for calming your newborn. He calls them womb-like sensations: Swaddle, Side-Stomach Position, Shush, Swing and Suck. Visit happiestbaby.com to learn how to master each one.

Photo: Beth via Flickr

3. Learn to Speak Baby
Newborns can’t talk yet, but that doesn’t mean that can’t communicate yet, and the brains behind Dunstan Baby Language think they’ve cracked the crying code. Watch online ($10 for 1 day or $15 for 15 days) and learn how to recognize each of five different cries your baby uses. In theory, if you can learn the difference between the hungry cry, tired cry and uncomfortable cry, you should be able to tend to your baby’s needs quickly and keep her happier.

4. Get on a Schedule, Stat
You probably wish your baby slept more, or longer, or took better naps. Take a few tips from mom of five, Janeen Maxwell in her book Help Baby Sleep: The Exhausted Parent’s Guide to a Restful First Year. She lays out a step by step, tried and tested, plan for getting more sleep (for you and Baby!), which relies heavily on establishing and sticking to a routine for feeding and sleeping. Her tips also include knowing the difference between crying and fussing (and not always running to the crib for the later). Get the book on amazon.com for $3.99.

Photo: Raul Hernandez Gonzalez via Flickr

5. Try Music, Any Music
Twinkle, Twinkle and Brahm’s Lullaby aren’t the only soothing tunes for newborns. Every baby has their own musical preferences. Some will be lulled to sleep by Star Wars, while others chill out to Taylor Swift. See proof here, that it’s not always the calmest songs that calm babies.

6. Read the Right Bedtime Story
Think Goodnight Moon is king of baby bedtime? Maybe not. Parents rave that reading The Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep will lull your baby, toddler or child to sleep. Written by a Swedish psychologist, the slow story of a rabbit who can’t sleep is supposed to be read in a certain way with some words emphasized and some enunciated. If you’re having trouble getting your little one to fall asleep, why not try it?

Willing to try anything? Then read more of our parenting hacks: 8 Sleep Tips for Desperate Parents.

What’s your go to trick for calming your baby or getting him to sleep? Share your tips in a Comment.

–Julie Seguss